COVID-19: Two years and counting
This six-part series from The Washington Times takes an in-depth look at where we stand, two years into the coronavirus pandemic.
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Health officials are coming to realize that while pushing COVID-19 vaccines to the market in record time likely saved hundreds of thousands of lives in America, it also meant they didn't get the dosing decisions exactly right.
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Americans are eager for a post-omicron lull in the pandemic, but experts warn that the coronavirus isn't finished. New variants aside, the pandemic over the past two years has carved scars across society that the country hasn't begun to face.
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Herd immunity projection was just one of the areas where COVID-19 has humiliated policymakers and experts who have tried to lead the U.S. through the pandemic.
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Today, Dr. Anthony Fauci's face is on Halloween masks and billboards, his name has become synonymous with the COVID-19 pandemic, and anyone who doesn't recognize him must have taken social distancing so seriously that they have shut off society completely.
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The federal government's compensation fund for people who say they have been injured by a COVID-19 vaccine lists more than 5,600 claims, including body aches, migraines, heart failure and stroke.
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Congress has approved about $6 trillion for the fight against COVID-19, or more than it spent to defeat Nazi Germany and imperial Japan in World War II.
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